Accessibility
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A nearby user may be able to overhear spoken passwords
Description: A disclosure issue existed in the handling of passwords.
This issue was addressed by disabling the speaking of passwords.
CVE-2016-7634: Davut Hari

Accessibility
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A person with physical access to an iOS device may be able to
access photos and contacts from the lock screen
Description: A lock screen issue allowed access to photos and
contacts on a locked device. This issue was addressed by restricting
options offered on a locked device.
CVE-2016-7664: Miguel Alvarado of iDeviceHelp

Accounts
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: An issue existed which did not reset the authorization
settings on app uninstall
Description: This issue was addressed through improved sanitization.
CVE-2016-7651: Ju Zhu and Lilang Wu of Trend Micro

CoreMedia External Displays
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local application may be able to execute arbitrary code in
the context of the mediaserver daemon
Description: A type confusion issue was addressed through improved
memory handling.
CVE-2016-7655: Keen Lab working with Trend Micro's Zero Day
Initiative
Entry added December 13, 2016

Disk Images
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: An application may be able to execute arbitrary code with
kernel privileges
Description: A memory corruption issue was addressed through improved
input validation.
CVE-2016-7616: daybreaker@Minionz working with Trend Micro's Zero Day
Initiative
Entry added December 13, 2016

Find My iPhone
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: An attacker with an unlocked device may be able to disable
Find My iPhone
Description: A state management issue existed in the handling of
authentication information. This issue was addressed through
improved storage of account information.
CVE-2016-7638: an anonymous researcher, Sezer Sakiner

Graphics Driver
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: Watching a maliciously crafted video may lead to a denial of
service
Description: A denial of service issue existed in the handling of
video. This issue was addressed through improved input validation.
CVE-2016-7665: Moataz El Gaml of Schlumberger

Image Capture
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A malicious HID device may be able to cause arbitrary code
execution
Description: A validation issue existed in the handling of USB image
devices. This issue was addressed through improved input validation.
CVE-2016-4690: Andy Davis of NCC Group

ImageIO
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A remote attacker may be able to leak memory
Description: An out-of-bounds read was addressed through improved
bounds checking.
CVE-2016-7643: Yangkang (@dnpushme) of Qihoo360 Qex Team
Entry added December 13, 2016

IOHIDFamily
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local application with system privileges may be able to
execute arbitrary code with kernel privileges
Description: A use after free issue was addressed through improved
memory management.
CVE-2016-7591: daybreaker of Minionz
Entry added December 13, 2016

IOKit
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: An application may be able to read kernel memory
Description: A memory corruption issue was addressed through improved
input validation.
CVE-2016-7657: Keen Lab working with Trend Micro's Zero Day
Initiative
Entry added December 13, 2016

Kernel
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: An application may be able to read kernel memory
Description: An insufficient initialization issue was addressed by
properly initializing memory returned to user space.
CVE-2016-7607: Brandon Azad
Entry added December 13, 2016

Kernel
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local user may be able to cause a system denial of service
Description: A denial of service issue was addressed through improved
memory handling.
CVE-2016-7615: The UK's National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC)
Entry added December 13, 2016

Kernel
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local user may be able to cause an unexpected system
termination or arbitrary code execution in the kernel
Description: A use after free issue was addressed through improved
memory management.
CVE-2016-7621: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
Entry added December 13, 2016

Kernel
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local user may be able to gain root privileges
Description: A memory corruption issue was addressed through improved
input validation.
CVE-2016-7637: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
Entry added December 13, 2016

Kernel
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local application with system privileges may be able to
execute arbitrary code with kernel privileges
Description: A use after free issue was addressed through improved
memory management.
CVE-2016-7644: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
Entry added December 13, 2016

libarchive
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local attacker may be able to overwrite existing files
Description: A validation issue existed in the handling of symlinks.
This issue was addressed through improved validation of symlinks.
CVE-2016-7619: an anonymous researcher
Entry added December 13, 2016

Local Authentication
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: The device may not lock the screen after the idle timeout
Description: A logic issue existed in the handling of the idle timer
when the Touch ID prompt is shown. This issue was addressed through
improved handling of the idle timer.
CVE-2016-7601: an anonymous researcher

Mail
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: An email signed with a revoked certificate may appear valid
Description: S/MIME policy failed to check if a certificate was
valid. This issue was addressed by notifying a user if an email was
signed with a revoked certificate.
CVE-2016-4689: an anonymous researcher

Media Player
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A user may be able to view photos and contacts from the
lockscreen
Description: A validation issue existed in the handling of media
selection. This issue was addressed through improved validation.
CVE-2016-7653

Power Management
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local user may be able to gain root privileges
Description: An issue in mach port name references was addressed
through improved validation.
CVE-2016-7661: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
Entry added December 13, 2016

Security
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: An attacker may be able to exploit weaknesses in the 3DES
cryptographic algorithm
Description: 3DES was removed as a default cipher.
CVE-2016-4693: GaÃ«tan Leurent and Karthikeyan Bhargavan from INRIA
Paris
Entry added December 13, 2016

Security
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: An attacker in a privileged network position may be able to
cause a denial of service
Description: A validation issue existed in the handling of OCSP
responder URLs. This issue was addressed by verifying OCSP revocation
status after CA validation and limiting the number of OCSP requests
per certificate.
CVE-2016-7636: Maksymilian Arciemowicz (cxsecurity.com)
Entry added December 13, 2016

SpringBoard
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A person with physical access to an iOS device may be able to
unlock the device
Description: In some cases, a counter issue existed in the handling
of passcode attempts when resetting the passcode. This was addressed
through improved state management.
CVE-2016-4781: an anonymous researcher

SpringBoard
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A person with physical access to an iOS device may be able to
keep the device unlocked
Description: A cleanup issue existed in the handling of Handoff with
Siri. This was addressed through improved state management.
CVE-2016-7597: an anonymous researcher

syslog
Available for: iPhone 5 and later, iPad 4th generation and later,
iPod touch 6th generation and later
Impact: A local user may be able to gain root privileges
Description: An issue in mach port name references was addressed
through improved validation.
CVE-2016-7660: Ian Beer of Google Project Zero
Entry added December 13, 2016

This update is available through iTunes and Software Update on your
iOS device, and will not appear in your computer's Software Update
application, or in the Apple Downloads site. Make sure you have an
Internet connection and have installed the latest version of iTunes
from www.apple.com/itunes/

iTunes and Software Update on the device will automatically check
Apple's update server on its weekly schedule. When an update is
detected, it is downloaded and the option to be installed is
presented to the user when the iOS device is docked. We recommend
applying the update immediately if possible. Selecting Don't Install
will present the option the next time you connect your iOS device.

The automatic update process may take up to a week depending on the
day that iTunes or the device checks for updates. You may manually
obtain the update via the Check for Updates button within iTunes, or
the Software Update on your device.

To check that the iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad has been updated:

* Navigate to Settings
* Select General
* Select About. The version after applying this update
will be "10.2".

Information will also be posted to the Apple Security Updates
web site: https://support.apple.com/kb/HT201222

This message is signed with Apple's Product Security PGP key,
and details are available at:
https://www.apple.com/support/security/pgp/
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Comment: GPGTools - https://gpgtools.org